615 Matching Annotations
  1. Feb 2021
  2. Jan 2021
    1. This raises a very important point: we can’t know every user’s reason for why they’re visiting our website, but we can use the tools made available to us to help guide them along their way. If that means storing an HTML document for use offline, we’re empowered to help make the experience as easy as possible.
  3. Dec 2020
  4. Nov 2020
  5. Oct 2020
  6. Sep 2020
    1. If everyone did all of the above things, they would have the personal infrastructure in place to enable their lives to become zero-emissions. But the above changes only cover 45% of average American emissions—so what gives? The remaining 55% of emissions come indirectly from the goods, services, and food we buy. The only way we’ll get to a zero-carbon world is for each of those industries to adopt new technology and change their processes to be emissions-free, or be replaced with a zero-emissions alternative. That’s why your first action is voting to make sure that policies and incentives are put in place to accelerate the overall transition.

      The "above things" being:

      1. Vote for elected officials who prioritize smart climate policy; join climate action or political groups to support pro-climat candidates and non-profits.
      2. Use only electric vehicles. Your next car [and this right here is a measure of how very car-dependent Americans as a whole are] needs to be electric. [AND you also need to press your power companies and government for clean electricity; lots of electricity comes from coal!]
      3. Electrify your house. There's a reason California's no longer permitting gas in new construction. Induction has vastly improved!
      4. Switch to all-green electricity. See my note on #2.
    1. Le Bert, N., Tan, A. T., Kunasegaran, K., Tham, C. Y. L., Hafezi, M., Chia, A., Chng, M. H. Y., Lin, M., Tan, N., Linster, M., Chia, W. N., Chen, M. I.-C., Wang, L.-F., Ooi, E. E., Kalimuddin, S., Tambyah, P. A., Low, J. G.-H., Tan, Y.-J., & Bertoletti, A. (2020). SARS-CoV-2-specific T cell immunity in cases of COVID-19 and SARS, and uninfected controls. Nature, 584(7821), 457–462. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-020-2550-z

  7. Aug 2020
  8. Jul 2020
    1. "Other office suites are focusing on the 'power user' which is a valuable market, for sure, but the real power and range for an open-source office suite alternative is the vast majority which is the 'rest of us. Sometimes we all forget how empowering open source is to the entire world."
    1. And a girl who has no agency because her "agent" not her mother has authority in doing what's best for her daughter.
    1. From the usability point of view the decision to enforce opening links in new windows violates one of the fundamental principles of the user interface design: users should always be in control of the interface they are interacting with.
  9. Jun 2020
    1. Individual Financial Planning

      Alexander Beard Group - Financial advisor for individuals, we use a variety of approaches to ensure that your individual financial planning requirements are comprehensively met.

    1. Robbiani, D. F., Gaebler, C., Muecksch, F., Lorenzi, J. C. C., Wang, Z., Cho, A., Agudelo, M., Barnes, C. O., Gazumyan, A., Finkin, S., Hagglof, T., Oliveira, T. Y., Viant, C., Hurley, A., Hoffmann, H.-H., Millard, K. G., Kost, R. G., Cipolla, M., Gordon, K., … Nussenzweig, M. C. (2020). Convergent Antibody Responses to SARS-CoV-2 Infection in Convalescent Individuals [Preprint]. Immunology. https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.05.13.092619

  10. May 2020
    1. All of the features of NLS were in support of Engelbart's goal of augmenting collective knowledge work and therefore focused on making the user more powerful, not simply on making the system easier to use.
    1. “Until CR 1.0 there was no effective privacy standard or requirement for recording consent in a common format and providing people with a receipt they can reuse for data rights.  Individuals could not track their consents or monitor how their information was processed or know who to hold accountable in the event of a breach of their privacy,” said Colin Wallis, executive director, Kantara Initiative.  “CR 1.0 changes the game.  A consent receipt promises to put the power back into the hands of the individual and, together with its supporting API — the consent receipt generator — is an innovative mechanism for businesses to comply with upcoming GDPR requirements.  For the first time individuals and organizations will be able to maintain and manage permissions for personal data.”
  11. Apr 2020
  12. Jan 2020
    1. Joint laxity
    2. Slender limbs
    3. carinatum
    4. Scoliosis
    5. Tall stature
    6. large ears
    7. Midface hypoplasia
    8. Open mouth appearance
    9. Long face
    10. aggressive behavior
    11. intellectual disability
    12. Developmental delay
    13. Arachnodactyly
    14. Joint laxity
    15. Slender limbs
    16. Scoliosis
    17. Tall stature
    18. aortic root dilatation
    19. mitral regurgitation
    20. mitral valve prolapse
    21. large ears
    22. Midface hypoplasia
    23. Open mouth appearance
    24. Short philtrum
    25. Long face
    26. Hypotonia
    27. aggressive behavior
    28. intellectual disability
    29. Developmental delay
    30. Arachnodactyly
    31. Camptodactyly
    32. Joint laxity
    33. Slender limbs
    34. Scoliosis
    35. Tall stature
    36. mild mitral valve regurgitation
    37. Midface hypoplasia
    38. Open mouth appearance
    39. Short philtrum
    40. Long face
    41. Hypotonia
    42. intellectual disability
    43. Developmental delay
    44. Arachnodactyly
    45. Joint laxity
    46. Slender limbs
    47. Scoliosis
    48. Tall stature
    49. small patent ductal arteriosus
    50. large ears
    51. Midface hypoplasia
    52. Open mouth appearance
    53. Short philtrum
    54. Long face
    55. Hypotonia
    56. intellectual disability
    57. Developmental delay
    58. Arachnodactyly
    59. Camptodactyly
    60. Joint laxity
    61. Slender limbs
    62. Pectus
    63. Pectus
    64. Scoliosis
    65. Tall stature
    66. atrial septal defect
    67. large ears
    68. Open mouth appearance
    69. Short philtrum
    70. Long face
    71. Hypotonia
    72. intellectual disability
    73. Developmental delay
    1. Feeding difficulty
    2. Hypotonia
    3. Anteverted nares
    4. Short nose
    5. Depressed nasal ridge
    6. Low-set ears
    7. Widely spaced eyes
    8. Thick eyebrow
    9. Flat face
    10. Prominent forehead
    11. dolichocephaly
    12. Speech impairment
    13. Developmental delay
    14. Hyperphagia
    15. Feeding difficulty
    16. narrow palate
    17. Anteverted nares
    18. Short nose
    19. Depressed nasal ridge
    20. Depressed nasal bridg
    21. Low-set ears
    22. Posteriorly rotated ears
    23. Widely spaced eyes
    24. High, arched eyebrow
    25. Thick eyebrow
    26. Flat face
    27. Prominent forehead
    28. dolichocephaly
    29. Speech impairment
    30. Developmental delay